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Today is Breonna Taylor's birthday. She would've turned 27
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Grind City Culture
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In case you need a reminder, Breonna was brutally murdered by a group of rogue police conducting an illegal drug raid in the wrong neighborhood. They did not knock. They did not announce themselves in any way before breaking down her door and shooting her in the middle of the night. The police haven't been charged yet. Please sign our super-petition demanding that these officers be charged for murdering Breonna, ok?
As a full-time EMT for two hospitals in Louisville, Kentucky, Breonna Taylor was a beloved and respected essential worker during the coronavirus pandemic. That police brutality killed her, and not the virus, is a painful reflection of the state of America.
A loving daughter, caring sister, and a kind and giving friend throughout her short life, she had a servant’s heart and dedicated her entire life to helping people.
Breonna and her hard-working family moved to Louisville, Kentucky 12 years ago looking for a better life together. They found better jobs, a welcoming community, good schools, and were happy to call Louisville their home.
Breonna was always caring and thoughtful of others. At an early age she decided to dedicate her time to helping people. She worked with children with disabilities right after she graduated high school and spent the last several years working as an Emergency Medical Technician as she prepared to become a full-time nurse.
As proud as her family was of the good she did, they were concerned by the risks she faced serving patients impacted by the coronavirus. As an employee of not just one but two medical centers, she was living out her dream of serving others. She was truly on the front lines of the pandemic response, risking her own life every day to protect the community that she had come to love, and that loved her.
As concerned as her family was about her putting herself at risk as an EMT during a pandemic, they never ever expected that her life would be taken in her own home by the local police.
Breonna Taylor was working as an EMT in Louisville when the coronavirus pandemic hit the country, helping to save lives while trying to protect her own.
On
March 13, the 26-year-old aspiring nurse was killed in her apartment,
shot at least eight times by Louisville police officers who officials
have said were executing a drug warrant, according to a lawsuit filed by
the family, accusing officers of wrongful death, excessive force and
gross negligence.
“Not
one person has talked to me. Not one person has explained anything to
me,” Tamika Palmer,
Taylor’s mother, said in an interview. “I want
justice for her. I want them to say her name. There’s no reason Breonna
should be dead at all.”
According
to the lawsuit, filed April 27, Louisville police executed a search
warrant at Taylor’s home, looking for a man who did not live in Taylor’s
apartment complex and had already been detained when officers came to
Taylor’s apartment after midnight. Taylor’s boyfriend, Kenneth Walker,
was also in the apartment and, according to the lawsuit, shot at
officers when they attempted to enter without announcing themselves. The
lawsuit alleges that police fired more than 20 rounds of ammunition
into the apartment.
Taylor’s death is the kind that could have drawn national headlines in the Black Lives Matter era, like the deaths of Sandra Bland and Atatiana Jefferson,
but has gotten little attention amid news of the spread of the
coronavirus. The pandemic headlines were partly to blame in drowning out
news of Taylor’s death, but so, too, is gender bias, said attorney Ben
Crump, who has risen to prominence in recent years as the lawyer for
several high-profile cases involving black men killed by police and
neighborhood vigilantes.None
of the officers involved have been charged in connection with the
shooting. Walker, a licensed gun owner who was not injured in the
incident, was arrested and faces charges of first-degree assault and
attempted murder of a police officer.Louisville
Metro Police Department spokeswoman Jessie Halladay declined to comment
on the case and said in a statement, “There is an ongoing public
integrity investigation into this case and therefore it would be
inappropriate for us to comment at this time.”
When
Palmer answered, her daughter’s boyfriend was on the other end, saying
someone was trying to break into the couple’s apartment. Still shaking
off the fog of sleep, Palmer jumped out of the bed at Walker’s next
words: “I think they shot Breonna.”
Palmer
got dressed and left home for what would be an hours-long ordeal. She
drove to her daughter’s apartment, to the hospital and then back to the
apartment as the sun rose. She said officers gave her little information
and asked whether she had any enemies or whether she and her boyfriend
were having problems.
Finally, Palmer figured out that her daughter was dead.
Palmer
gets emotional when she considers that she was more concerned with her
daughter’s safety as a health-care worker than she was about her being
safe in her own home.
“She
was an essential worker. She had to go to work,” Palmer said. “She
didn’t have a problem with that. … To not be able to sleep in her own
bed without someone busting down her door and taking her life. … I was
just like, ‘Make sure you wash your hands!’ ”
The Black
Lives Matter movement caught on in 2014, sparked by social media
campaigns and public outrage, drawing attention to the killing of
unarmed black Americans by police officers and sometimes leading to the
arrest, prosecutions and, in rare cases, convictions of the shooters.
While many of the headlines and hashtags are often for men — the primary
victims of such shootings — black women are also impacted.
Taylor’s
sister, Ju’Niyah Palmer, has been on social media daily, posting
pictures of the two of them with hashtags like #JusticeForBre, to remind
people that she was a victim and not a suspect in a crime. Taylor did
not have a criminal record.
“I’m
just getting awareness for my sister, for people to know who she is,
what her name is,” said Ju’Niyah Palmer, 20, who lived with Taylor but
was not at home at the time of the incident. “It is literally just as
equal. There’s no difference.”
Photos and
videos of runners with hashtags like #RunWithMaud and #AhmaudArbery
were trending in recent days, including Friday, which would have been
Arbery’s 26th birthday. Crump is now calling for the same attention for
Taylor.
“If you ran for Ahmaud, you need to stand for Bre,” he said.
This story is part of a collaboration between The Washington Post and the 19th, a nonprofit newsroom covering gender, politics and policy.
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